About
The Symposium on Strength and Solidarity for Human Rights was a multi-year project (2019-2025) to provoke new efforts and energy for building organizational strength and increased solidarity across the human rights field.
We saw states retreating from their responsibility to protect rights, and saw it as ever more critical to grow cross-cultural, intergenerational, multi-identity, and all-class participation in defense of human rights.
We wanted to help generate shared language and common frameworks in order to be more effective allies. We proposed open conversations about power and deference to those on the frontlines that could help to renew our struggles and fortify relationships. We hoped to see robust connections among our organizations that might maintain and increase mutual support.
To that end, the Symposium on Strength and Solidarity for Human Rights sought to be a source of ideas and provocation within the global human rights movement. We convened frontline activists, organizational leaders, scholars, and movement builders in conversations about the challenges rights defenders were facing. And we drew on those conversations to produce written and digital materials about building respectful organizational culture, achieving effective governance and funding, and establishing a rigorous practice of solidarity.
A Reader on Strength and Solidarity
As the project drew to a close, we decided to pull together all the materials and tools that we used to create our Symposium and make them available to anyone who might find them useful. The Reader contains background on our rationale, the readings we used, a sample case study and a guide to writing case studies, as well as practical descriptions of our approach to convening and moderation. Printed copies were made available to participants of the Symposium and an online version can be viewed and downloaded here.
Our Approach
Institutional health and reliable solidarity are critical to the success of human rights work. In order to advocate and promote both, we saw it as important to:
BUILD SPACES OF TRUST that allow leading members of human rights organizations and movements to make an honest appraisal of the human rights sector and their role within it
MODERATE COMPLEX CONVERSATIONS so that participants of all origins can speak and collaborate with safety and ease
CONNECT SYMPOSIUM PARTICIPANTS with opportunities to strengthen their relationships and think deeply about the health and resilience of their movements and organizations
FOCUS ON SOLIDARITY AND DEFERENCE as powerful tools in multi-generational, multi-cultural and multi-class struggles for human rights
FOSTER CONDITIONS TO NURTURE OPTIMISM AND CREATIVITY because hope and invention are fundamental to every struggle
What We Did
We served as a meeting point for the people and ideas driving – and disrupting – the human rights sector. We sought to foster new conversations among rights leaders, and all those who support and study their work.
We held two Symposia a year. These were events in which around 20 invited participants playing leading roles in human rights organisations and movements around the world took part in a week-long series of immersive and intensive, moderated conversations. The exchanges provided participants with opportunities to analyse the current state of their field and see how their peers were tackling problems and innovating to strengthen their work. Above all, each group investigated what makes effective and powerful solidarity possible and what might impede its progress.
We hosted:
- The Symposium
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We brought proven rights leaders together for an extended conversation about the ways that language, power, governance, identity and leadership were shaping human rights organizations and movements – as well as the forms of solidarity that could be built between them. Learn more about our events
- A podcast
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Each episode featured insights and reflections on the tools and tactics of human rights work and how activists were thinking about their strategies. Listen in
- A collection of ideas
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Commentaries and analysis that provoked rigorous thinking and interrogation within the human rights field. Learn more